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CordDial: Usability study about new enhanced TUI with elastic feedback for mobile platform
Youngeun Song,Ian Oakley 한국HCI학회 2018 한국HCI학회 학술대회 Vol.2018 No.1
While commercial Tangible User Interfaces (TUI) based on capacitive touch screen has appeared, exploring its usability is one of important research area. Thus, we explored usability of TUI on a tablet using Fitts’ law. Our study compared multi-touch input, commercial TUI, and a TUI enhanced with an elastic cord that provides passive haptic feedback, during interaction on a tablet with five representative spanning movement tasks; pull, cross, bend, slide, and rotation. We run this empirical study with 13 participants and gathered throughput, error rate, and subjective ratings (NASA TLX) about combination of each input and task. Our result shows the TUI with the cord decrease overall performance for the bend task. Our work contributes finding new empirical data highlight performance variations between multi-touch and TUI, and suggesting novel TUI with an elastic cord for providing passive haptic feedback.
JaeMin Song,YoungEun Jung,JoonHyuk Park,MoonDoo Kim,MinSeok Cheon,ChangIn Lee 대한신경정신의학회 2017 PSYCHIATRY INVESTIGATION Vol.14 No.4
Drug Reaction with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms (DRESS) syndrome is associated with severe skin eruptions, fever, hematological abnormalities, and multi-organ involvement. Although aromatic anticonvulsant drugs have been frequently associated with the manifestation of DRESS syndrome, its induction following treatment with nonaromatic anticonvulsants, such as valproate, has rarely been reported. Moreover, there are limited data regarding the development of neosensitization related to chemically unrelated drugs following an episode of DRESS syndrome. Here, a case of neosensitization to multiple drugs is described. The present case report describes a female patient who experienced neosensitization to amoxicillin, olanzapine, and quetiapine following the manifestation of DRESS syndrome induced by valproate.